Making images secure

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aneurysm

11:39 pm on Feb 9, 2001 (gmt 0)

What is the best way to protect images on a web page so that others can't right-click on them to copy them.

Xoc

12:02 am on Feb 10, 2001 (gmt 0)

There is no possible way. The way that the web works is that the image is copied to the end-user's machine, then displayed in the browser. You cannot defeat this and still have the images available in a web browser. All you can do is make it more difficult to get to the standard options in the web browser, but anyone with any technical skill can defeat that.

tedster

This won't really stop anything but casual theft, however. The committed thief has a lot of other options, including turning off javascript in their browser or looking in their cache.

When it comes to images, I don't know of any way to disable a simple screen capture -- that does the job and also bypasses embedded copyright messages.

sean orourke

12:28 am on Feb 10, 2001 (gmt 0)

Depending on the type of site/images you have, there is always the "if you can't beat 'em, join 'em" approach. By this I mean adding a small, discrete reference of your URL on the pictures. This can drive a surprising amount of traffic in the right situations.

(not that I agree with people who pilfer images, but maybe 90% of the people online don't even know what "copyright" means.... you can always have lawyers explain the term to them, but that might be better saved for issues such as pagejacking)

eljefe3

2:48 am on Feb 10, 2001 (gmt 0)

Isn't there some sort of "watermark" tracking system where you can see if others have pinched your images and displayed them on their sites? Could have sworn I've seen this somewhere before. Perhaps it's a specialized company that offers this service.